Leonard Böger

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43 Following
12 Posts
🪱🧠⏳✖️🦠🤔🥓 nematode neuroscience | PhD candidate at Scholz lab & Lightfoot lab | he/him

Male and female #tardigrades are essentially indistinguishable, so how do they tell the sexes apart? Well, it turns out that female tardigrades can smell both sexes, hanging out with both, but males ignore other males and are only attracted to the scents of females

#olfaction #neuroethology #biology #minibeasts #zoology #science

https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/226/18/jeb246664/329431

Scent is key for tardigrade sociology

Many creatures pull out all the stops to attract the perfect mate. Some turn up the contrast on scales, pelts and plumage, while others build up muscle to impress and some sing their hearts out, but male tardigrades don't bother with any of those flourishes. ‘Very few tardigrade species have extreme male traits’, says Justine Chartrain from University of Jyväskylä, Finland. So how do tardigrades attract members of the opposite sex? One possibility was that the microscopic creatures might release alluring scents to attract a partner, but it wasn't clear whether tardigrades can even smell each other and whether suitors might be able to follow an attractive odour, let alone a scent trail, toward a potential mate. With very little known about the reproductive strategies of the ∼1500 tardigrade species currently identified, Chartrain and her colleagues Emily Knott and Sara Calhim (University of Jyväskylä), with tardigrade specialist Łukasz Michalczyk (Jagiellonian University, Poland), decided to find out how one tardigrade species, Macrobiotus polonicus, responds to members of the opposite sex.Chartrain kept colonies of the tiny creatures in flooded Petri dishes; however, to make sure that the animals were keen to mate, Chartrain needed to be certain that the tardigrades had never encountered a suitor, so she collected individual eggs before allowing the animals to develop into adults in isolation. Then, she constructed a tardigrade-sized arena, with two adjacent circular chambers 8 mm apart, before submerging the arena in water and placing a male in one chamber and a female in the other. Once the scene was set, Chartrain collected a third tardigrade, placed it in the space between the two chambers and waited patiently to find out whether the animal could smell either of the tardigrades hidden in their respective chambers and, if it could, how the animal in the middle reacted.After hours of watching the tiny creatures located between the two chambers, it was clear that the males could smell the female secreted in her chamber and were keen to reach her, showing no interest in the chamber containing the male tardigrade. However, the females placed in the space between the two tardigrade chambers were able to smell both sexes and meandered back and forth between the two. So, tardigrades can smell each other, but males are definitely attracted by the alluring scent of females, which made the team wonder whether tardigrades can follow the scent trails left by others as they saunter across surfaces?This time, Chartrain prepared an arena coated in soft agar and gave a tardigrade a 5 min head start as it wandered on the surface before releasing a member of the opposite sex in the vicinity to find out whether it could locate the first tardigrade. ‘They moved slowly, but much more than expected’, she chuckles, recalling that the mini-beasts often explored the entire area. However, none of the tardigrades – male or female – succeeded in finding and following the trail of the pioneering tardigrade. Without water to carry the leader's aroma, the second tardigrade was unable to pursue it. However, when a male ran into a female as it strolled along, the male diverted course to associate with and move side by side with the female. But, when females collided with males, they did not deviate and continued on their solitary course.So, tardigrades cannot follow each other's scent trails, but they can smell the aromas of other tardigrades when immersed in water, and even though male and female tardigrades are virtually indistinguishable by appearance, they clearly smell different and males are keen to locate females when they get the chance.

The Company of Biologists
ah, more “arbitrary timberland”, “random woodland” and “irregular backwoods” from the world of machine learning, picked up the tortured phrase detector
https://pubpeer.com/publications/71D829DEB0F2BEC5A7B27C90588BC0
#papermills #plagiarism
PubPeer - Design and Implement Multiple Disease Prediction System

There are comments on PubPeer for publication: Design and Implement Multiple Disease Prediction System (2023)

I spend amazing two days at the #pristionchus conference in Tübingen. Psyched by a lot of good conversations, I can’t wait to continue with my research on the feeding decision in P. pacificus. To everyone looking for a great and welcoming scientific community to study #evodevoneuro, as Curtis Loer put it, or the #newnaturalhistory as Mary Jane West-Eberhard did, the Pristionchus crowd might just be the right fit!

#MastodonScience #nematode #decisionmaking #neuroscience #neurobiology

Our train is an hour late now, but the connecting train is cancelled anyways 🤷🏻‍♂️ but the view is nice.
What are the most beautiful places along the Rhine that are worth being late for?
#db #rhine #pristionchus
On my way to Tübingen to the #pristionchus meeting, along with my lab mates and my poster on the prediction of feeding behavior of this predatory #nematode.
#celegans #mastodonscience
Skin cancer, London rents and your great great great granddaughter

Listen to this episode from More or Less: Behind the Stats on Spotify. A BBC report quoted a study that said 1 in 4 men and 1 in 5 women in the UK will get skin cancer in their lifetime. Tim Harford and the team look into the detail. Also London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan said London’s average rent will hit £2,700 a month next year, with the average take home salary £2,131. How accurate are the figures and what do they tell us about the affordability of the capital’s rental properties? We fact check Donald Trump’s recent claim that 35,000 Americans died building the Panama Canal. And as noughties band Busted re-release Year 3000 with the Jonas Brothers, just how many greats should be in front of “granddaughter” in that famous lyric?

Spotify

Sometimes I wonder what I do all day, too. Might have to check this out.

#Science #Books

It’s almost a week since my course at #neuromatch ended and it was 🔥 Learned so much about #compneuro and modelling and I had a lot of fun. I still wanted to say thanks to NMA, my amazing TAs and pod for making it such a great experience! 🧠🚀🧮
A new Largest Animal Ever just dropped. The colossus whale might have been 2x to 3x heavier than the current largest animal ever known, the blue whale https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bizarre-looking-colossus-whale-may-have-been-heaviest-animal-ever-sorry-blue-whales/
Bizarre-Looking Colossus Whale May Have Been Heaviest Animal Ever (Sorry, Blue Whales)

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” says a paleontologist not involved in the discovery of a 40-million-year-old fossilized whale

Scientific American
How concrete, asphalt and urban heat islands add to the misery of heat waves

How concrete, asphalt and urban heat islands add to the misery of heat waves

Reuters